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D earnings call for the period ending September 30, 2017.

Contents:

Prepared Remarks

Questions and Answers

Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the Dominion Energy and Dominion Energy Midstream Partners' Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. At this time, each of your lines is in a listen-only mode. At the conclusion of today's presentation, we will open the floor for questions. Instructions will be given as to the procedure to follow if you would like to ask a question. I would now like to turn the call over to Tom Hamlin, Vice President of Investor Relations and Financial Planning for the Safe Harbor statement. Sir, please begin.

Good morning, and welcome to the Third Quarter 2017 Earnings Conference Call for Dominion Energy and Dominion Energy Midstream Partners. During this call, we will refer to certain schedules included in this morning's earnings releases and pages from our Earnings Release Kit. Schedules in the Earnings Release Kit are intended to answer the more detailed questions pertaining to operating statistics and accounting. Investor Relations will be available after the call for any clarification of these schedules.

If you've not done so, I encourage you to visit the Investor Relations page on our website, register for email alerts and view our third quarter earnings documents. Our website addresses are dominionenergy.com and dominionenergymidstream.com. In addition to the Earnings Release Kit, we have included a slide presentation on our website that will follow this morning's discussion.And now, for the usual cautionary language. The earnings releases and other matters that will be discussed on the call today may contain forward-looking statements and estimates that are subject to various risks and uncertainties.

Please refer to our SEC filings, including our most recent annual reports on Form 10-K. and our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, for a discussion of factors that may cause results to differ from management's projections, forecasts, estimates, and expectations. Also on this call, we will discuss some measures of our company's performance that differ from those recognized by GAAP. Reconciliation of our non-GAAP measures to most directly comparable GAAP financial measures we are able to calculate and report are contained in the Earnings Release Kit and Dominion Energy Midstream's press release. Joining us on the call this morning are our CEO, Tom Farrell; our CFO, Mark McGettrick; and other members of our management team.

Mark will discuss our earnings results for the quarter and Dominion Energy's earnings guidance. Tom will review our operating and regulatory activities and review the progress we've made on our growth plans. I will now turn the call over to Mark McGettrick.

Good morning. Dominion Energy reported operating earnings $1.04 per share for the third quarter of 2017, which was in the middle of our guidance range. Positive factors versus guidance for the quarter were lower interest expenses, income taxes, and operating expenses. Negative drivers include lower merchant power margins and continue mild weather.

In fact, the negative earnings impact of mild weather across our electric and gas operations during the first three quarters of the year was $0.12 per share.GAAP earnings were $1.03 per share for the third quarter. The principal difference between GAAP and operating earnings for the quarter were charges related to our integration of Questar. A reconciliation of operating earnings to reported earnings can be found on Schedule two of the Earnings Release Kit. Moving to results by operating segment.

Power Delivery produced EBITDA of $441 million for the third quarter, which was in middle of its guidance range. The impact of slightly milder weather was offset by below lower operating expenses. EBITDA at Power Generation was $565 million for the third quarter, which was below the middle of its guidance range. Lower PJM merchant margins were the principal negative driver along with slightly milder weather.

Partially offsetting these factors were lower operating and maintenance expenses. Gas infrastructure produced EBITDA of $471 million for the third quarter, which was near the high end of its guidance range, primarily due to the lower operating expenses. Overall, we are very pleased with results from all of our operating segments.For the third quarter 2017, Dominion Energy Midstream Partners produced adjusted EBITDA of $76.2 million, nearly three times the level produced in the third quarter of 2016. Distributable cash flow was $45.8 million, 90% higher than the level of last year's third quarter.

The acquisition of Questar Pipeline in December of last year was the principal driver of the increase. On October 24, Dominion Energy Midstream Board of Directors declared a distribution of $0.3025 per common unit, payable on November 15. This distribution represents a 5% increase over last quarter's payment and is consistent with our 22% per year distribution growth rate plan. Our coverage ratio remains extremely strong at 1.28 times. Moving to Treasury activities at Dominion Energy, cash flow from operating activities was $3.7 billion through the 3rd quarter.

We have $5.5 billion of credit facilities and taking into account cash, short-term investments, and commercial paper outstanding, we ended the quarter with available liquidity of $2.5 billion. For the status of our 2017 financings, please see Slide 7; and for statements of cash flow and liquidity, please see Pages 14 and 25 of the earnings release kit. Earlier this month, the partners in the Atlantic Coast Pipeline closed on a construction financing facility designed to fund roughly half of the costs to construct the pipeline. The first funding of $570 million took place last week to cover a portion of the costs incurred to-date.

As to hedging, you can find our hedge positions on Page 27 of the earnings release kit. We have hedged 98% of our expected 2017 production at Millstone, and have started hedging 2018 production, principally for the first quarter. We plan to limit our hedging of 2018 production until we see the outcome of legislation in Connecticut. Now, to earnings guidance at Dominion Energy.

Operating earnings for the fourth quarter of 2017 are expected to be between $0.80 and $1 per share compared to operating earnings of $0.99 per share for the fourth quarter of 2016. Positive factors compared to last year's fourth quarter are earnings from our growth projects and the benefit from recently announced agreement between Dominion Products and Services and HomeServe USA. Negative factors for the fourth quarter compared to last year include a refueling outage at Millstone, lower import revenues from Cove Point, lower investment tax credits from solar projects, and higher PJM electric capacity expenses. Dominion Energy's operating earnings guidance for the full year of 2017 remains $3.40 to $3.90 per share.

We remain confident that operating earnings for 2018 will increase by at least 10% over the $3.65 per share midpoint of this year's earnings guidance range, driven primarily by earnings from our Cove Point export facility which will be in service later this year. We also reiterate our expectation of a 6% to 8% EPS growth rate from 2017 through 2020, an EPS growth of at least 5% per year thereafter. So, let me summarize my financial review; third quarter operating earnings were $1.04 per share, landing in the middle of our guidance range despite continued mild weather. Fourth quarter operating earnings guidance is $0.80 to $1 per share, and 2018 operating earnings are expected to be at least 10% above the midpoint of our 2017 operating earnings guidance range.

I'll now turn the call over to Tom Farrell.

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Good morning. Strong operational and safety performance continued at Dominion. All of our business units either met or exceeded their safety goals through the first 9 months of the year. I'm pleased that our employees have set an all-time low OSHA recordable rate of 0.66 last year and are on track to improve on that record this year.

Our incoming fleet continues to operate well. The net capacity factor of our six units through the end of the third quarter was over 96%. Weather-normalized electric sales for the first three quarters of the year were up 1.7% over the same period last year, led by growth in sales to data centers and residential customers. Year-to-date, total new customer connects are in line with our expectations as strong growth in commercial connections have offset slightly lower than expected growth in residential new connects.

Through the third quarter, we have connected 11 new data centers compared to seven for the first nine months of last year. Also during the quarter, our Gas Infrastructure Group executed an amendment to an existing Marcellus farmout agreement, locking in the remaining value under the agreement and securing payments totaling $130 million in 2017 and 2018. You will recall that in 2015 when we began discussing our farmout program, we anticipated generating between $450 million and $500 million in earnings from farmout transactions from 2015 through 2020. We are halfway through that timeline and, despite less than ideal commodity market conditions, we have already achieved nearly 3/4 of our objective.

Last week, the Connecticut General Assembly approved legislation that will allow our Millstone nuclear plant the opportunity to compete with other non-emitting generating resources in a state-sponsored solicitation for 0 carbon electricity. On behalf of the 1,500 women and men working at Millstone Power Station, Dominion Energy thanks the General Assembly for giving Millstone this opportunity and is grateful for the Malloy administration for his work in negotiating the current form of the legislation. It provides a path forward to retain 1,500 well-paying jobs and Millstone's substantial environmental, energy and economic benefits to Connecticut. Now for an update on our growth plans.

Construction of the 1,588 megawatt Greensville County Combined Cycle Power Station continues on time and on budget. As of September 30, the $1.3 billion project was 60% complete. The air-cooled condenser is over 80% complete, while pipe rack modules have been set and pipe welding continues at a steady rate. Greensville is on schedule to achieve first fire in the second quarter of next year and is expected to achieve commercial operations in late 2018.

We have a number of solar projects under development and continue to see demand for renewables from our customers. Year-to-date, six solar facilities totaling approximately 169 megawatts have achieved commercial operation. For all remaining 2017 projects, panel deliveries have been secured and the projects are on schedule for completion this quarter. In total, we have announced 457 megawatts that will go into service this year and expect to add another 200 megawatts by the end of next year, increasing our gross operating portfolio from 1,660 megawatts to over 1,800 megawatts, of which 700 will be in Virginia and North Carolina.

Earlier this month, we announced we will add solar generation to serve a new data center Facebook plans to build in Central Virginia. Pending State Corporation Commission approval, this need will be met with a new rate option, Schedule RF, which will allow large energy users to meet their needs through the addition of renewable energy resources. We are currently evaluating the potential for pump storage project in the coalfield region of Virginia. A preliminary permit application has been filed with FERC, identifying a potential project site in Tazewell County, Virginia.

We've also contracted with Virginia Tech to study the feasibility of using an abandoned coal mine in Wise County to construct a pump storage facility. The General Assembly has enacted legislation stating the construction of one or more new pump storage electric generating facilities in Southwest Virginia. It's in the public interest with costs recoverable through a rate rider. In July, we announced that we had signed an agreement with Ørsted, formerly DONG Energy of Denmark, a global leader in offshore wind development, to build two turbines off the coast of Virginia Beach.

The two companies are now refining agreements for engineering, procurement, and construction. Dominion Energy will remain the sole owner of the project, which is targeted for completion in 2020. We plan to seek rider recovery for the project during the first half of next year. We have a number of electric transmission projects in various stages of regulatory approval and construction.

Through the end of the third quarter, $419 million of assets have been placed into service. We plan to invest $800 million in our electric transmission business this year and every year thereafter for at least the next decade. Progress on our growth plan for Gas Infrastructure continues as well. Our Cove Point Liquefaction project is now 97% complete and remains on time and on budget.

Construction is essentially complete. All processes have been turned over for site commissioning and we have entered the final phase of start-up. We have completed the initial operating run on our auxiliary boilers, steam turbine generators, Frame 7EA combustion turbines and numerous motors, pumps, and compressors that are part of the liquefaction process. FERC has approved the introduction of all hydrocarbons necessary to generate LNG.

The operation's formal training is complete. We are fully staffed with trained and qualified operators. We will begin generating LNG next month then conclude commissioning in December and expect to be in service by the end of the year. We're continuing to work toward the commencement of construction on the Atlantic Coast Pipeline and the related Supply Header Project.

On October 13, FERC issued its certificate of public convenience and necessity and we filed our acceptance of the certificate the following week. The project has achieved several additional permitting milestones over the last few weeks, including the final biological opinion from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, approval of the Virginia Outdoors Foundation easements and approval from the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. ACP and Supply Header have essentially completed the design and engineering, executed the construction contracts and completed 90% of materials procurement.

We expect to commence construction late this year and to complete both the Atlantic Coast Pipeline and the Supply Header in the second half of 2019. We've also made progress on 9 Gas Infrastructure growth projects representing over $1 billion of investment. Three of these projects have been completed this year and we expect two more to be completed by year-end. In addition to these incremental projects, we plan to invest $325 million to $350 million per year at our three gas utilities as part of our ongoing pipeline replacement programs.

These costs are recoverable through rate rider programs in all three jurisdictions. And in September, we announced a long-term investment program to modernize our Dominion Energy transmissions pipeline and storage infrastructure. These investments will deliver operating, reliability, security, safety and environmental benefits and are expected to total about $250 million per year. To support this investment program, we plan to file a rate case in the first half of next year, the first for this pipeline in over 20 years, in which we will request updated rates and establish a tracker for recovery of the modernization investments.

Finally, earlier this month, Dominion Energy's Board of Directors declared a dividend of $0.77 per share for the fourth quarter of this year, an increase of 10% above the dividend paid in the fourth quarter of last year. The increase reflects the board's confidence in Dominion Energy's execution of its growth plan and the enhanced cash flows made possible by our master limited partnership. Our plan is to share these benefits with our shareholders by growing our dividend at a 10% rate through at least 2020. So to summarize, our businesses delivered strong operating and safety performance in the third quarter.

Construction of the Greensville County project is on time and on budget. Construction of the Cove Point Liquefaction project is essentially complete and commissioning is well underway to be in service late this year, on time and on budget. We received the FERC certificate for Atlantic Coast Pipeline and Supply Header Project and will commence construction soon. And we expect earnings growth of at least 10% in 2018, driven by completion of the Cove Point Liquefaction project, and 6% to 8% growth from 2017 to 2020.

We further expect earnings-per-share growth of at least 5% per year thereafter, supported by a diverse set of growth programs. Because of our unique MLP structure, our superior cash flows will also allow a dividend growth rate at Dominion Energy of 10% per year through at least 2020. With that, we will be happy to take your questions.

Question and Answers

Operator

Thank you. At this time we will open the floor for questions. If you would like to ask a question, please press the star key followed by the one key on your touchtone phone now. If you would like to remove yourself in the questioning queue, you may do so by pressing star two.

Again, to ask a question please press star one at this time. Our first question comes from Stephen Byrd of Morgan Stanley.

Stephen Byrd -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Hi, good morning.

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Good morning, too.

Stephen Byrd -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

I wanted to follow-up on the progress in Connecticut. It's very good to see the legislative progress. I was reading, I guess, the budget that's available for renewable solicitations was reduced under the budget that the legislature has established. Can you speak to the implications? Is there -- do you believe the Governor is likely to support this lower budget for renewables? How does that potentially impact the ability to get the needed dollars here to support the plant?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Steve, first, we're not going to comment any further on what's going on in Connecticut. The Governor has the budget and the Millstone legislation. And until we've gotten through that process, we're just going to remain -- we'll see what happens. We'll have further comments after that has taken its course.

Stephen Byrd -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Yes. Very much understood. And then, just shifting over to the new -- the $250 million a year of modernization, would you mind just speaking a little bit further to the approval process, just the timeline? You mentioned when you'll be filing, but could you help us just understand how this might play out procedurally?

Diane Leopold -- Executive Vice President

This is Diane Leopold. So we're looking to file probably toward the middle of next year. And a typical process with FERC, we would expect to hear back in the course of anywhere in a 6 to 12-month time frame with the initial feedback from them, and we will begin to negotiate with the customers during that time frame. In addition to the actual base rate, the rates for the base, we are filing for a modernization program and that will be going on simultaneously with the base rate.

Stephen Byrd -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Understood. And so that customer negotiation process will essentially occur in tandem with the FERC process? Is that fair to say?

Thank you. So first, about the 2017 guidance, did I hear right that you said that you expect to be at least at the midpoint, yet the weather has been a pretty meaningful drag year-to-date? So what's the offset here to get to the midpoint of the guidance range?

Well, what we've showed in terms of the guidance on our slide is a range of $0.80 to $1. And if you take that, coupled with what our actual earnings were for the first three quarters, that would put you about at a $3.60 range, which says that if we can achieve that, we've made up $0.07 of the $0.12 worth of the weather headwind that were -- have projected. And if we can get a little help with the weather the rest of this year, our operating expenses may be able to make up more, but right now we've guided to about $3.60 at the midpoint of the fourth quarter range.

Angie Storozynski -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Okay. Very good. Secondly, on -- can you comment any updated thoughts on the impact of the proposed tax reform on Dominion, especially given the more clarity on the deductibility of interest expense?

Angie, this is Mark. We want to see the house bill come out. We've been saying since first of the year, we think, right now we assume we're debt-neutral. If the interest deductibility is handled appropriately, we can certainly be a net positive on that, depending what the actual tax rate would be for corporations at the end of the day.

But there's so many moving parts. We would really like to hold off until we see the house bill, which I think is scheduled to come out on November 1, and then we'll be able to talk more about that.

Angie Storozynski -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Very good. And my last question on Cove Point and DM. I understand that you don't need any drop-downs into the MLP in order to get to the 22% growth in distribution, but the stock has been really strong, DM, and the asset is, I mean, literally starting operations probably within weeks. You have, in the past, done opportunistic drop-downs.

We will consider an early drop if DM continues to perform well and the unit performs well, which we fully expect. So we will take advantage of the market conditions out there. We've only given the reference that we don't need a drop and actually, we need a very small drop until late 2018. But again, if market conditions continue to be good, we will -- can drop at any time after the Cove Point comes online.

Good morning. How much of a surprise is the Connecticut legislation to you? Like how -- what do you think the chances of success are in getting it signed by the Governor, especially since he was involved in the process of negotiating its final form?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Well, there's two parts to that question. First part, how surprised are we? We weren't surprised. We've been working on it for two years and been deeply involved in it for that period of time. And as far as the -- how the Governor is going to react to it, we're going to make no further comments on what goes on in Connecticut until we get on the other side of that process.

Michael Weinstein -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

What kind of a -- what would you be looking for in terms of trying -- length of contracts there? And what kinds of factors would you be looking to see in advance before you decide how long a contract you would want to have for Millstone?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

We're just going to have to hold off on giving any further information on what the future of Millstone Power Station is and how it will play through into this auction until we get through this legislative process.

Michael Weinstein -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Fair enough. All right. Thank you very much.

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Praful Mehta from Citigroup.

Praful Mehta -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Hi, guys.

Michael Weinstein -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Morning.

Praful Mehta -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Morning. So I know your growth story laid out through 2020 was pretty clear in terms of all these projects. I just want to understand the 5% that you've talked about post-2020. And you said a balanced mix.

Could you just give some color on what are the factors driving the post-2020 growth? Any big projects you're considering? Or is there M&A involved in that as well?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

There's no M&A involved in that and there aren't big projects. I think if you look at the presentations we've made through these fall conferences, we lay out a more programmatic method of achieving that growth post-2020 in all aspects -- all parts of the business. There's a lot of slides available on our website. I think they can take you through all of that.

Yes, Praful, we purposely wanted to get investors refocused on the core strength of Dominion's many businesses. And so we have two great large projects, obviously moving along with ACP and Cove Point. But the post-2020, I think if you look at the presentations we've made in conferences, you see very strong organic growth in all of our business lines, which we think strongly support at least 5% growth going forward. And again, I would just encourage you to go ahead and take a look at that.

Sorry, just a second follow-up question on -- I won't get into the Millstone side with Connecticut, but just on the DOE legislation, do you think there is any impact of that on the process? Or how are you looking at the DOE support for baseload? Do you think anything comes of that at all?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Are you talking about the DOE letter to FERC initiating the rulemaking?

Praful Mehta -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Yes, that's right.

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

I -- it's going to be very interesting to see, but what happens -- I mean, we still only have three FERC commissioners and two more coming so I don't think we really have an idea. And I read some comments by at least one of them. He doesn't think we should, as he had put it, should be putting their finger on the scales on fuel sources, but they've reacted quickly. I don't want to predict how that's going to come out, but it's certainly -- Connecticut certainly hasn't been willing to depend on it.

Praful Mehta -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Understood. Thanks, guys.

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Chris Turnure of JP Morgan.

Chris Turnure -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Good morning. Back in September, in one of your slide decks, you laid out a CapEx plan of $3.7 billion to $4.2 billion per year. I wanted to confirm that, that applies to the 2018 to 2020 period and get a little bit of a better sense on timing of that CapEx, I guess, excluding Atlantic Coast. I think it's probably a fair assumption to say that the Power Delivery and Gas Infrastructure parts of that are pretty visible and pretty stable for the most part and that the Power Generation would be the lumpier part of it.

Yes. Chris, it's Mark. I'm not sure that's exactly fair. I think that on the Power Gen side for the next three years, they have a pretty clear plan of what they're going to do between solar, the license extension work for the two -- for the nuclear plants in Virginia.

And I would -- if I had to model it right now because I know we have -- we always have more exposure on this, but if I would model it, I would just model it evenly over the three years. It would be pretty consistent, I think and be pretty consistent by business line. We're also have highlighted a project on the pump storage side that we'll also be expending CapEx on in that period of time as well as well into the next decade. And potentially, offshore wind, certainly a smaller project with two turbines.

So we've highlighted that we'll be going through the approval process and we've highlighted some dollar figures around that. So we've given quite a bit of disclosure, but we'll need to get a little more granularity, I think, by business line as we move into '18, '19 and '20.

Chris Turnure -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. And then, I guess, shifting to the balance sheet side of it, if we use that range of CapEx or maybe the midpoint as one part of the equation, add in your kind of known dividend growth through the end of this decade and drop-down financing as well, at what point do you get comfortable with your balance sheet as having enough excess capacity to buy back shares?

Well, I think that will depend on the size of drops we make into Dominion Midstream from Cove Point, but we've made a commitment to the agencies and investors and bondholders that we know we have too much leverage at the Holdco. And we've done that by design and we're going to use the DM drop-down structure to de-lever the Holdco between now and the end of the decade down into 30% to 40% of the family of Dominion debt. And I think we can do that comfortably with drop-downs into DM for the period with Cove Point and have the potential to buy back shares if that's the best use of those proceeds. We could well buy back shares.

We could also just invest in future growth that may come up that we haven't identified already. So again, I think we have a lot of flexibility and we feel real comfortable about being able to execute on both sides between now and 2020.

Chris Turnure -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks, Mark.

Operator

Our next question comes from Paul Ridzon from KeyBanc.

Paul Ridzon -- Keybanc -- Analyst

Good morning. Tom, you indicated you were more than 3/4 of the way in the farmouts. Is there upside to that ultimate number?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

I wouldn't think so. I think we do expect to land in that $450 million to $500 million. It's just -- I think more -- it will be more timing of when the farmouts come in. But I wouldn't -- I'd love to say yes, but I don't think that would be reasonable at this point unless you see a very dramatic increase in commodity prices.

Paul Ridzon -- Keybanc -- Analyst

And you said you've hedged into 1Q of '18 at Millstone. Can you tell how much you've hedged?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

We haven't disclosed how much we've hedged, but we're working hard on hedging the first quarter. We will go into the year very highly hedged again based on our expectation of the timing of the Connecticut auction, but because that certainly won't be -- we don't believe in the first quarter of next year, we elected to go ahead and start hedging in, and have for some time, the first quarter. Also, we will not be, Paul, disclosing hedge prices at Millstone because we will be in competitive auction for some load at Millstone, we certainly hope. And so we historically have put a hedge price out, but going forward, for competitive reasons, we will not put a hedge price out.

Thank you for that. And what do you expect your solar tax credits to be for the full year?

Our solar tax credit is going to be about half what they were last year, about $0.26 a share.

Paul Ridzon -- Keybanc -- Analyst

I thought we had a $0.31 pick up this quarter. Is there a timing issue there?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Those ITCs move all around, but I think the $0.26 we feel real good about for month-end -- excuse me, for year-end. And if you recall, to remind everybody, not only have we backed it down to half this year, but on a going-forward basis, you should think about a $0.10 range, plus or minus, for ITCs going forward. So we're kind of out of the ITC business except for some unusual projects that might come up at Virginia and North Carolina.

Paul Ridzon -- Keybanc -- Analyst

And do you have a sense of the capital at the pump storage? Or is it too early for that?

Paul Koonce -- Chief Executive Officer, Dominion Generation Group

Paul, this is Paul Koonce. It's really too early for that. I think we said publicly, it could be up to $2 billion, but it really is a site-specific number and we're just really not there yet.

Paul Ridzon -- Keybanc -- Analyst

Understood. Thank you very much.

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Jeremy Tonet from JPMorgan.

Jeremy Tonet -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Good morning.

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Good morning.

Jeremy Tonet -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

I just wanted to follow-up on some of the projects that you laid out there, in particular, Atlantic Coast Pipe. Congrats on getting the FERC certificate there. I was just wondering if you could provide a bit more color on the state level side as far as getting the permits and how you see that process progressing. It seems like there's been some noise out there.

So I wanted to see any thoughts that you could share.

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

I'll give you a general answer and Diane can fill in any specific questions. We really there's -- we need more permits in West Virginia, North Carolina, and Virginia. We expect all those by the middle part of December as we're going through the process. It's a very typical process, lots of questions come from the regulators.

We provide answers that makes them ask more questions and we provide more answers, but we're coming to the end of that process and we expect to have all those permits by the middle part of December and be underway. Diane, anything to add to that?

Diane Leopold -- Executive Vice President

No, that's right.

Jeremy Tonet -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Great, thanks. And just thinking about the assets that sit at DM right now, I was wondering if you could provide any updates as far as how the existing growth projects are progressing. I think there's some small ones there. And any thoughts for the MLP kind of taking on more organic growth initiatives at that level going forward?

Jeremy, this is Mark. The growth projects at DM right now are mainly focused on Carolina Gas Transmission. And as the same as we've highlighted when we actually IPO, they've been executed very well. We're going to bring the third one on this year -- at the end of this year.

We'll expend CapEx at about -- a little bit over $100 million on it, fully contracted. We look for really good future growth out of the Carolina business. We also look for very good future growth out of the Questar Pipeline. For this calendar year, most of the growth on Questar that's been executed is really based on synergies of the merger and we've been able to execute that at a very high level.

And actually, we'll be able to produce at a higher level for the Questar Pipe than we anticipated earlier in the year for DM. So again, our goal over time is to get more assets into DM that can grow organically, but quite honestly, for the next three years, that will be dwarfed by the Cove Point drop-down.

Jeremy Tonet -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

That makes sense. Turning to Cove a bit more here, it seems like there's a bit of open capacity if I have my numbers right with regards to how much you contracted out and what the full capacity of the facility could be. And just wondering how you think about that -- the extra capacity if everything hits kind of nameplate or [indiscernible] how do you think about the value there and the state of the LNG market? And how might that play into the MLP drop-down economics?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Good question, but the way that -- our shippers get to take up whatever excess capacity there is. I'm talking about our existing shippers obviously.

Jeremy Tonet -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Paul Patterson from Glenrock Associates

Paul Patterson -- Glenrock -- Analyst

Good morning. How are you?

Tom Farrell -- Chief Executive Officer and President

Hi, Paul?

Paul Patterson -- Glenrock -- Analyst

It's been some time since I dealt with a pipeline rate case. Could you guys give us a little bit of feeling about what the ROE that you guys are earning at DETI and what you might be asking for in terms of the ROE and what have you?

Diane Leopold -- Executive Vice President

This is Diane Leopold. You can really look to the last filed rate cases that are out there for any kind of guidance on that. We're not going to talk about the actual ROE that we earn right now, but we are very comfortable that we've been investing in the system and now is the right time to be going in for a rate case.

Okay. And you're not going to give us right now a sense as to what you guys are earning? Or we'll just have to wait until the filing, I guess, is that right?

Diane Leopold -- Executive Vice President

That's correct.

Paul Patterson -- Glenrock -- Analyst

Okay. And then, the Dominion Products and Services agreement with HomeServe, could you give us a sense as to -- just elaborate a little bit on that in terms of what's the earnings impact associated with that and what's actually going on?

Hey, Paul, this is Mark. This structure with HomeServe is very similar to other utilities that you'd be familiar with. They have partnered with Duke. They partner with NextEra.

They partner with AP. They partner with FirstEnergy. And the structure essentially is that you jointly market to customers that -- using a joint marketing of Dominion Energy and HomeServe. So it's a pretty common structure.

The way it will work for us is, over time, starting in the fourth quarter of this year, the existing business we have, which only contributes for us about a $0.01 or $0.02 a year and what's been a very stable good growth business for us but yet a small level, we will start transitioning that Product and Service customer base to HomeServe for them to service and grow from there. That will take some time to do. And from then on, we will get a commission-based fee as they grow that business going forward. They are the major player in this market and so they were very interested in acquiring our customer base there for Products and Services and it was a good deal for us.

But in terms of the earnings component, I'm going to hit you a little bit on that only because it hasn't closed yet and it will be some movement year to year from this year to next year based on the closing and consents, but it is in our guidance for the fourth quarter and we'll be able to talk more about that because we'll have to close the transaction by the next call.

Paul Patterson -- Glenrock -- Analyst

Okay. So it's transactional-related and it's probably pretty much just a fourth quarter event? And you'll give us the numbers...

Yes. I think that's the right way to think about it. I mean, we just -- we announced it publicly and we wanted to make sure everybody knew it was in our guidance, but it won't be just a fourth quarter event. It will be a multi-year event and then some with commissions.

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